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Pork Barbecue

I’m still reeling around what we had on the table for our New Year’s lunch. I promise, this’ll be the last post about decadence. In a few days, I’ll be posting healthier recipes – like grass salad, steamed grass, grass on a bed of lettuce and more grass, plus a grass smoothie.

I take that back, I haven’t really tested the waters of healthier eating yet. And I’m operating around the forces of procratination and the love of all things pork. You get the idea. But what I do to make up for all the fat I consume is that I jog. I try to jog regularly and I’m proud to say that for three consecutive days I’ve devoted time to jog. Yeah I know it’s not much of a stretch but at least I’m trying to offset the guilt.

Well, it’s not really guilt. It’s simply that bad feeling I get after eating a whole lot of everything. But I don’t want to dwell on the bad. After all, food is meant to be enjoyed, savored and loved. Sure, sometimes you wish you had another external stomach to digest what you’ve eaten lest it adds to your already expanding curvature. The mantra “all things in moderation” came a little too late.

But at that precious moment of biting into your favorite dish, the universe doesn’t matter. That probably happened to me more than once during lunch when I had pork barbecue.

What makes this barbecue special, aside from the taste, is that it’s skewered.

You must be scrunching your brows right about now. You see the only time we get to eat/make barbecue on a stick is during the New Year. That realization came when my dad and I had a conversation of why I needed to cube perfectly good solid pork. I told him that it’s the New Year, that’s the only time we get to do this. A long second later he realized where I came from and said “Oo nga nuh?” (That’s a “yeah, that’s right” or something to that effect).

Now you hopefully understand why some laws of the universe don’t matter so much to me anymore.

This recipe is meant to feed a reasonably sized crowd. I mean it. I couldn’t really account how many sticks were produced but the point is it’s meant to feed a family of 12 with leftovers to boot. But you can easily cut this recipe by half and adjust the taste of the marinade to your liking.

I recommend buying whole cuts of pork and if your butcher can help you cube it, the better. Buying the pork whole gives you more control over the amount of meat and fat you want in your barbecue. A typical pork barbecue stick has around 4 – 6 pieces, 80% of which is lean meat while the rest is delectable fat. I used a combination of lean (shoulder) and fatty cuts (belly).

I’d like to believe this is really a Filipino barbecue. It’s sweet and salty the way our barbecues should taste. The usual components of a marinade include a mixture of ketchup, soy sauce, vinegar/kalamansi juice and sugar but I added a few other things to tweak the traditional marinade a bit.

The resulting pork-on-a-stick is full of flavor. Apart from the strong marinade to begin with, it was alternately brushed with garlic and ginger flavored annatto oil and a sweetened reduced version of the marinade to keep it moist.

This is so special I wouldn’t really think of doing this at any other random weekend of the year. This is a New Year’s barbecue. Enough said. But since you’re not me, you might want to try it this weekend, or the next, or the next time your father, mother, son or daughter comes home. Either way, this is great stuff. I hope you’ll love it as much as we did. And please, don’t feel guilty after eating a stick, or eight.

Put the pork in a large colander and clean it by running it through tap water. Allow the water to drain and set aside.

Combine the marinade ingredients (except the cornstarch and water) together in a bowl large enough to hold the pork.

Adjust taste to your preference.

Add in the pork and mix well. Leave it covered in the refrigerator preferably overnight.

A few hours prior to grilling, skewer the pork pieces. Make sure not to overcrowd the skewer (We had around 4- 5 pieces per stick).

30 minutes prior to grilling, make the two basting sauces.

For the annatto oil: in a small saucepan over medium heat, melt the margarine. Do not allow to burn. Add the garlic and ginger and toast until the fragrant aromas are released. Set aside.

For the marinade reduction: In a medium saucepan, add the marinade and cook over medium heat. When it starts to boil, add the sugar and the cornstarch slurry. Cook until marinade reduces. Be sure to constantly watch over it because the boiling marinade might spill out of the pan. Set aside.

When the grill is ready, add the pork skewers and grill until both sides are evenly cooked, slightly charred but not totally burnt.

Alternately baste the pork with the reduced cooked marinade and the annatto oil, every 5 – 10 minutes. We baste only when one side starts to brown and sizzle.

When done, remove from the grill and baste with the remaining sauce. Serve warm and enjoy!

15 thoughts on “Pork Barbecue”

I love barbeque! It’s one of the those food that when served with vinegar makes me that I’m supposed to limit my rice intake. I envy you that you can cook because I have to run to the nearest BBQ vendor just to get my BBQ fix.

ANG SARAP!!! It’s been ages since I had good barbecue like that. I miss Zamboanga barbecue especially the one they used to sell in Canelar in front of what used to be the Blue Diamond Night Club. Super sarap :)

Canelar? The Blue diamond was in Sta. Maria. haha Anyway, if we’re talking about the same bbq stand (Bibing’s), I LOVE THEIR BBQ! That was my childhood right there! Pero I don’t know, recently I tasted their bbq, and it’s not the same anymore. It’s drier and it kind of lost the taste that made me fall in love with it in the first place. But hopefully I just went there on a bad day, so I’m still a fan. :D

I just ate my dinner and guess what its barbecue.hahaha and even i’m full, it makes me hungry reading your post. you really have talent for cooking @@ I’d probably say that one of the things I won’t forget about you is you and your family always prepare food deliciously and very tasteful.